neko suki desu. or neko suki
neko - cat
suki= like/fond of
desu- added to form some sort of politeness
"Watashi no pantsu no naka ni kanraku ga arimasu."
This is doubly funny because the word for cheese "kanraku" also means "pleasure" or "merriment."
Casually: チーズが好きだ (Chiizu ga suki da)
Politely: チーズが好きです (Chiizu ga suki desu)
You may say 'chiizu booru.'
we say Nakagawa if we want to say inside in Japanese.
メロン is how you say melon in Japanese.
To say tennis in Japanese.........テニス
Chi as in cheese then bi as in bee
To say blue fish in Japanese you say ブルーフィッシュ.
no cheese balls can be made up of many kinds of cheese not just one
No. In the US, chips are called French fries and made of potatoes. While cheese balls are made of soft, unripened cheese that is fried.
About 32 utz cheese balls = 1 ounce.
You may say 'Chiizu wo kaitai desu.'
Its a ball made of cheese.
Depends on the brand . Not all cheese balls are the same.
I think the word for cheese in Japanese is 'chiizu'.
You can safely prepare cheese balls 2 - 3 days before serving.
There is no record for catching cheese balls, but try it your self and make your own record.
The invention of cheese balls is shrouded in antiquity, and may in fact have occurred contemporaneously in several places at once. Cheese balls were referred to in everyday terms during the early 1920s, if not earlier, in recipes published in newspapers, suggesting a much earlier origin.It's quite possible that cheese was rolled into balls not very long after cheese itself was discovered.
no
Depends how big they make those cheese balls.